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CULTURE AND COGNITION 265
values that suffuse other aspects of belief, intention, and collective life has
succumbed to one of culture as complex rule-like structures that constitute
resources that can be put to strategic use (Bourdieu 1990, Sewell 1992, Swidler
1986).This shift makes studying culture much more complicated. Once we ac-
knowledge that culture is inconsistentthat peoples norms may deviate from
what the media represent as normal, or that our preconscious images and dis-
cursive accounts of a phenomenon may differit becomes crucial to identify
units of cultural analysis and to focus attention upon the relations among them.
In effect, our measures stop being indicators of a latent variable (culture), and
their relationship to culture becomes analogous to that of education, income,
and place of residence to social stratification: separate phenomena, analytically
related to a common theoretical construct, the relations among them a matter forempirical investigation (DAndrade 1995 notes similar trends in anthropology).
Similarly, once we acknowledge that people behave as if they use culture
strategically, it follows that the cultures into which people are socialized leave
much opportunity for choice and variation. Thus our attention turns to ways in
which differing cultural frames or understandings may be situationally cued.
Addressing such issues requires more elaborate and contestable psychological
presuppositions than did the culture-as-latent-variable view.
Psychology: More Complex Views of CognitionSuch questions make it sensible for sociologists of culture to turn to psychology
for insight into the mechanisms through which shared culture enters into cog-
nition. Yet nothing guarantees that psychologists, who have their own research
agendas, can help us. Thirty years ago, behaviorism made psychology essen-
tially irrelevant to the study of culture. Twenty years ago, psychologists casting
off the yoke of behaviorism focused primarily on the acquisition of skills and
capacities of little interest to most sociologists of culture. Even a dozen years
ago, the implications for cultural sociology of many of the ideas and research
traditions that are most useful today were still unclear.
What has happened to make psychology useful to sociologists of culture?
First, psychologists have rejected behaviorism, accepted and demonstrated the
existence of mental structures used to perceive, process, and retrieve informa-
tion, and found ways to make inferences about such structures. Second, just
as sociological research has demonstrated cultures complexity and fragmenta-
tion, psychological research has demonstrated the complexity of memory and
provided glimpses of the partitioning of mental structures by domain. Third,
recent foci of psychological research (schemata, categories, mental models,
and so on) are much richer in cultural content than the formal operations or in-
tellectual capacities that once preoccupied cognitivists and developmentalists
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266 DiMAGGIO
(Rogoff & Chavajay 1995). Fourth, some psychologists have taken notice of
such sociological topics as cross-cultural differences in cognition (Shweder &
Bourne 1991, Markus & Kitayama 1991), elite/popular interaction in cultural
change (Moscovici 1984), and distributed cognition (i.e. the social divisionof cognitive labor) (Resnick et al 1991, Salomon 1993).
In addition to expanding the grounds of shared interest between the two dis-
ciplines, such developments have also softened two important epistemological
differences. Whereas most sociologists of culture have been steadfastly an-
tireductionist, resisting efforts to portray culture as the aggregate of individual
subjectivities, psychology has focused upon the individual. Increasingly, how-
ever, as I shall argue, psychological research bolsters and clarifies the view of
culture as supra-individual, and even addresses supra-individual aspects of cog-
nition directly [as in work on pluralistic ignorance (Miller & Prentice 1994)].Second, some sociologists of culture rejected the subjectivist focus of psy-
chological research, calling instead for research on external aspects of culture
amenable to direct measurement (Wuthnow 1987). In recent years, cognitivists
have developed ingenious empirical techniques (reviewed in DAndrade 1995)
that permit strong inferences about mental structures, going far toward closing
the observability gap between external and subjective aspects of culture.
Of course, the fit between the disciplines must not be exaggerated. Most
of what psychologists do is irrelevant to sociologists of culture, and much
of the culture sociologists study is supra-individual. Common ground has in-
creased but will remain limited by the different subject matters of the disciplines
(Zerubavel 1997), which will remain complements rather than substitutes.
COGNITIVE PRESUPPOSITIONSOF CULTURAL SOCIOLOGY
Sociologists who write about the ways that culture enters into everyday life
necessarily make assumptions about cognitive processes. If we assume that ashared symbol evokes a sense of common identity (Warner 1959), that a certain
frame provokes people to think about a social issue in a new way (Gamson
1992), that lessons about the structure of space and time learned in school are
generalized to the workplace (Willis 1977), or that surveys can measure class
consciousness (see Fantasias critique 1995), we are then making powerful cog-
nitive assumptions. Such assumptions, while metatheoretical to sociologists,
are keenly empirical from the standpoint of cognitive psychology. It is cru-
cial, then, to evaluate our assumptions (or adjudicate differences among them)
by microtranslating presuppositions (Collins 1981) to the cognitive level andassessing their consistency with results of empirical research on cognition.
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CULTURE AND COGNITION 267
Coherence vs Fragmentation
Many sociologists have come to reject the latent-variable view of culture as
coherent, integrated, and ambiguous in favor of representations of culture as a
toolkit (Swidler 1986) or repertoire (Tilly 1992): a collection of stuff that
is heterogeneous in content and function. Yet much empirical work on culture
still presumes that culture is organized around national societies or cohesive
subnational groupings, is highly thematized, and is manifested in similar ways
across many domains (Hofstede 1980, Bourdieu 1984).
Is culture a latent variablea tight network of a few abstract central themes
and their more concrete entailments, all instantiated to various degrees in a
range of symbols, rituals, and practices? If so, then we would expect to find
that group members share a limited number of consistent elementsbeliefs,attitudes, typifications, strategiesand that the inclusion of any one element in
the collective culture implies the exclusion of inconsistent elements.
Or is culture a grab-bag of odds and ends: a pastiche of mediated repre-
sentations, a repertoire of techniques, or a toolkit of strategies? If so, then
we might expect less clustering of cultural elements within social groups, less
strong linkages among the elements, and weaker pressures for the exclusion of
inconsistent elements.
Research in cognitive psychology strongly supports the toolkit over the latent-
variable view and suggests that the typical toolkit is very large indeed. Partic-ularly relevant here is research (summarized by Gilbert 1991) on how people
attribute accuracy or plausibility to statements of fact and opinion. Consistent
with Swidlers (1986) contention that all people know more culture than they
use, Gilbert reports that The acceptance of an idea is a part of the automatic
comprehension of that idea, and the rejection of the idea occurs subsequent to
and more effortfully than its acceptance. In other words, our heads are full of
images, opinions, and information, untagged as to truth value, to which we are
inclined to attribute accuracy and plausibility.
Research on memory tells a similar story, revealing that information (includ-ing false information) passes into memory without being tagged as to source
or credibility, and that active inference is required to identify the source of the
information when it is recalled. Such inferences may be incorrect, yielding
misattributions of source and credibility (Johnson et al 1991).
This work has several important implications for students of culture. First,
it refutes the notion that people acquire a culture by imbibing it (and no other)
through socialization. Instead, it directs the search for sources of stability and
consistency in our beliefs and representations, first, to schematic organization,
which makes some ideas or images more accessible than others; and, second,to cues embedded in the physical and social environment.
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268 DiMAGGIO
Second, learning that people retain (and store with a default value of cor-
rect) almost every image or idea with which they have come into contact,
renders intelligible otherwise anomalous research findings about inconsistency
in expressions of attitudes across time, cultural volatility in periods of rapidchange (e.g. the fall of the Soviet system), and the susceptibility of attitudes to
framing effects (Sniderman & Piazza 1993).
Third, the research explains the capacity of individuals to participate in multi-
ple cultural traditions, even when those traditions contain inconsistent elements.
Fourth, it establishes the capacity of people to maintain distinctive and incon-
sistent action frames, which can be invoked in response to particular contextual
cues. Fifth, this work raises the possibility that socialization may be less ex-
perientially based, and more dependent upon media images and hearsay, than
many of our theories (for example, Bourdieus habitus [1990] construct) imply.Such inferences as these go beyond the scope of cognitive studies, to be sure,
and much rides on the precise ways in which schematic organization imposes
order upon stored knowledge and memory. Nonetheless, recent cognitive re-
search strongly reinforces the toolkit as opposed to the latent-variable view
of culture and, at the very least, places the burden of proof on those who de-
pict culture as strongly constraining behavior or who would argue that people
experience culture as highly integrated, that cultural meanings are strongly the-
matized, that culture is binding, and that cultural information acquired through
experience is more powerful than that acquired through other means.
Institution and Agency
Cognitive research can also enhance our appreciation of the view that culture
both constrains and enables (Sewell 1992). Although this position has become
virtually catechismic among sociologists of culture, we know little about the
conditions under which one or the other is the case. Many sociologists believe,
following Gramsci (1990), that culture, embedded in language and everyday
practices, constrains peoples capacity to imagine alternatives to existing ar-
rangements. At the same time, we know that people act as if they use cultural
elements strategically to pursue valued ends (Bourdieu 1990). Cognitive re-
search cannot answer the essentially sociological question of when culture does
each, but it can provide direction to the search.
The finding that culture is stored in memory as an indiscriminately assembled
and relatively unorganized collection of odds and ends imposes a far stronger
organizing burden on actors than did the earlier oversocialized view. The ques-
tion, then, is how the actor organizes the information that she or he possesses.
Psychological research points to two quite different mechanisms or modes of
cognition.
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CULTURE AND COGNITION 271
eminent psychologist (Bruner 1990:58) has written explicitly of the schema-
tizing power of institutions. Thus the psychology of mental structures provides
a microfoundation to the sociology of institutions.
Research on social cognition enhances our understanding of how culture con-strains but does not support theories that depict culture as overwhelmingly con-
straining. Instead, consistent with contemporary sociological theorizing, work
in psychology provides microfoundational evidence for the efficacy of agency.
DELIBERATIVE COGNITION In contrast to automatic thought, psychologists
note a quite different form of cognition, which is explicit, verbalized, slow,
and deliberate (DAndrade 1995). When sufficiently motivated, people can
override programmed modes of thought to think critically and reflexively.
Such overrides are necessarily rare because deliberation is so inefficient inits rejection of the shortcuts that automatic cognition offers. Consequently, the
key question is why people are ever deliberative. Psychologists have identified
three facilitating conditions in studies that intriguingly parallel work in the
sociology of culture.
Attention Psychological research suggests that people shift into deliberative
modes of thought relatively easily when their attention is attracted to a problem.
For example, experimenters can create false recollections of a videotape or story
among laboratory witnesses by presenting inaccurate information or askingleading questions (Loftus et al 1989). But when the task is changed to ask
subjects to think carefully about the source of particular bits of information,
the experimental effect is diminished or eliminated (Johnson et al 1993). In
experimental studies of attitude-behavior consistency, merely increasing self-
awareness by placing a mirror in the face of the subject as he or she completes an
attitude questionnaire significantly increases the attitude-behavior correlation
(Abelson 1981:722). Such results parallel the insights of students of social
movements, who have studied agenda-building and who have also noted the
effectiveness as an organizing device of reframing issues in ways that callattention to problems salient to movement participants (Snow & Benford 1992).
Motivation People may also shift from automatic to deliberative cognition
when they are strongly motivated to do so by dissatisfaction with the status
quo or by the moral salience of a particular issue. For example, although
racist schemata are accessible to most white Americans, whites can override
such schemata to some extent through awareness and reflexivity (Devine 1989).
Marxs theory of class consciousnesswhich contends that physically prox-
imate workers facing immiseration will overcome false beliefs through inter-
action and reflectionis a classic sociological counterpart (and see Bourdieu
1974).
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CULTURE AND COGNITION 273
from the former with significant behavioral consequences and that this process
represents a basis for the relative autonomy of social norms (Miller & Prentice
1996, Noelle-Neumann 1993).
INTERGROUP CONTRAST AND POLARIZATION The existence of group-level
cultures (shared understanding partly independent of individual beliefs) is also
suggested by the tendency of groups to adopt public positions more extreme
than the preferences of their members, especially when acting with reference
to a contrasting group. What is striking is not polarization per se, but the cul-
tural availability of polarized stances (representations of collective opinion) on
which members of each group can converge (Tajfel 1981).
SCHEMATA AS CULTURE Not all schemata are cultural to the same degree.Some schemata reflect universal cognitive processes (for example, basic object
categorization), whereas others may be quite idiosyncratic. Many schemata,
however, and the schemata of greatest interest to sociologists of culture, en-
act widely held scripts that appear independent of individual experience. For
example, the research, cited above, that found coherence in ratings of small
group behavior emerging only after the fact, led the author (Shweder 1982) to
speculate that much of what passes as clinical research on personality is really
about cultural constructions of personhood (and see Meyer 1986).
COHERENT CULTURES AS EXTERNAL TO PERSONS Despite this chapters fo-
cus on subjective representations of culture, we must not forget that relatively
coherent cultural forms exist independently of persons in the broader environ-
ment. Indeed, one of the more notable characteristics of modern societies is
the existence of a cultural division of labor in which intellectual producers in-
tentionally create and diffuse myths, images, and idea systems (Douglas 1986,
Farr & Moscovici 1984, Swidler 1997). Other relatively coherent representa-
tions exist less formally as narratives or stories repeatedly invoked in public
discourse (Dobbin 1994, White 1992).
AN INITIAL SYNTHESIS Some would argue that whatever coherence exists
flows from such externally available sources, i.e. that cultural coherence is
entirely external to the person. As we have seen, however, such a position
pushes the healthy shift from the latent-variable to the toolkit one step too far.
Instead, the research reviewed here suggests that culture works through the in-
teraction of three forms. First, we have information, distributed across persons
(Carley 1991). Such distribution is patterned, but not highly differentiating,
due to the indiscriminant manner in which bits of culture are accumulated and
stored in memory (Gilbert 1991). Second, we have mental structures, espe-
cially schematic representations of complex social phenomena, which shape
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CULTURE AND COGNITION 275
messages and more subtle elements such as anthems and flags (Cerulo 1994).
Collective identities are chronically contested, as groups vie to produce social
representations capable of evoking schemata favorable to their ideal or material
interests (Moscovici 1984, Zerubavel 1994, Friedland & Hecht 1996).Another line of research, active in both psychology and sociology, views
identities and selves as collective representations that vary cross-culturally and
historically. Markus et al (1996) review research on differences in the cultural
construction of identity in East Asian and Western societies. Meyer& Jepperson
(1996) contend that the modern self (and its variations in different polities) is a
constructed identity endowed with agency in relation to the collectivity.
COLLECTIVE ELEMENTS IN INDIVIDUAL IDENTITIES Much research on collec-
tive identity is actually about the more complex issue of the ways in which socialidentities enter into the constitution of individual selves. Social identity theory
views individual identities as comprising prioritized identity-sets based on par-
ticularistic and role-based group affiliations (Stryker 1986). Self-categorization
theories also portray collective identities as invoked by conditions that make
particular identities especially salient (Tajfel & Turner 1986). In this view,
individual identities reflect elaborated group-identity schemata in proportion to
strength and recency of activation. Viewing identities as context-dependent in
this way is consistent with observations of the volatility with which identities
may gain and lose salience during periods of intergroup conflict.
Collective Memory
Collective memory is the outcome of processes affecting, respectively, the
information to which individuals have access, the schemata by which people
understand the past, and the external symbols or messages that prime these
schemata. Like collective identities, research on collective memory portrays
the phenomenon in both supra-individual and individual terms.
Several scholars have studied institutional processes that maintain or suppress
information as part of public culture, such as factors determining the reputation
and popularity of particular persons or art works (Fine 1996, Griswold 1986,
Lang & Lang 1988). Much research, however, focuses upon the schematic level,
studying struggles to define the ways in which members of a society interpret
widely shared information about their past, either tracking change in the ways
in which a person or public figure is understood over time (Schudson 1992,
Schwartz 1991) or analyzing conflict over alternative visions of a collective
past (Maier 1988, Zerubavel 1994).
Little research has focused on the interaction between individual and col-
lective memories. An exception is the work of Schuman & Scott (1989), who
use survey methods to explore the possibility that the historical events that
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276 DiMAGGIO
men and women of different generations remember most vividly structure their
understanding of contemporary social issues.
Social ClassificationThe study of social classificationthe social construction and use of category
schemeshas burgeoned in the last decade. Some work has analyzed processes
of classification in historical time, describing the emergence of a strongly clas-
sified artistic high culture (DiMaggio 1982), or the use of social categorization
in the formation and implementation of social policies (Starr 1992). Of particu-
lar interest is Mohrs (1994) analysis of discourse roles, which uses structural
equivalence analysis to identify the implicit classification of social problems
and client groups embedded in self-descriptions of social-service and poverty-
relief organizations in early twentieth-century New York City.Other research has focused upon social differentiation in shorter time spans.
Zelizer (1989) describes the process by which women find ways to differenti-
ate even money, the universal medium of exchange, in order to imbue it with
social meaning. Lamont (1992) analyzes the bases upon which men of differ-
ent regional and national origins make social distinctions that reinforce their
sense of social honor. Gieryn (1997) describes boundary work within scientific
communities, examining how scientists respond when the strong classification
science/nonscience is threatened.
Zerubavel, one of few sociologists to study classification from a cognitive
perspective, points out that the drive to partition a continuous world appears
to be a human universal, though the nature of the categories constructed may
vary significantly among groups (Zerubavel 1991, 1997, Douglas 1966). Rosch
(1978), whose work has dominated psychological thinking on the topic, pro-
poses (with much experimental support) that cognition is most efficient when
we chunk many separate features (bits of information) together by thinking
with a prototype (complete mental image) of an object. Prototypical constructs
emerge at the most efficient level of abstraction: i.e. where an increase in speci-
ficity provides the greatest marginal increase in information. Thus we have
prototypes for chair but not furniture or divan, and for bird but not
for animal or sparrow. Although the level at which object prototypes form
appears to be relatively universal, the specific content of a prototype reflects a
mix of typicality and availability in a given location (DAndrade 1995).
Rosch applied her model of prototypes to relatively simple concepts. Self-
categorization theory draws on the prototype model (Hogg & McGarty 1990),
but it remains to be seen if complex social constructs are represented in such
unambiguous terms. If so, application to role analysis may be useful, in light
of an intriguing parallel between Roschs characterization of a prototype as a
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CULTURE AND COGNITION 277
core of essential features and Nadels (1957) classic definition of social role as
consisting of a core of entailments and a penumbra of optional features.
Logics of ActionMany authors have used the expression logics of action to refer to an inter-
dependent set of representations or constraints that influence action in a given
domain. Sometimes, of course, the term is used as a synonym for ideal type
(Orru 1991) or, in rational-actor approaches, to refer to situational constraints
that induce parallel behaviors among players with similar resources given par-
ticular rules of the game (Block 1990, Offe 1985).
A richer, more cultural, sense of logics has emerged in recent work in political
economy, a view that embeds them in the interaction between mental structures
instantiated in practical reason (Bourdieu 1990), on the one hand, and institu-tional requirements on the other. Friedland & Alford (1991:24849) provide
the most thorough exposition and definition, describing institutional logics
as sets of material practices and symbolic constructions that constitute an
institutional orders organizing principles and are available to organizations
and individuals to elaborate. According to Friedland & Alford, these logics
are symbolically grounded, organizationally structured, politically defined and
technically and materially constrained.
Similar imagery is apparent in Boltanski & Thevenots notion of modes
of justification (1991), institutionally linked discourses embodying specific
orientations toward action and evaluation. Empirical development of similar
ideas can be found in Fligsteins (1990) work on conceptions of control in
corporate governance, and in Starks (1990) analysis of shop floor politics in a
Hungarian socialist factory.
Such work requires a taxonomy of institutions, each of which entails a dis-
tinctive logic. (For Friedland & Alford, the institutions are capitalism, the
state, democracy, family, religion, and science, each of which has its own ax-
ial principle and linked routines and rituals.) Conflict erupts from the clash
of institutional logics, as when a wife views her household labor through a
marketplace logic of explicit exchange, whereas her husband imposes a family
logic of selfless service upon the situation.
The notion of logics is immensely appealing. First, it proposes that external
rituals and stimuli interact with internal mental structures to generate routine
behavior. Second, it is consistent with the view that culture is fragmented
among potentially inconsistent elements, without surrendering the notion of
limited coherence, which thematization of clusters of rituals and schemata
around institutions provides. Third, it provides a vocabulary for discussing
cultural conflict as confrontation between inconsistent logics of action.
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CULTURE AND COGNITION 279
& Gelman 1994). In this view, clusters of schemata are coherent only within
limited boundaries; taken together, the domains are more like the collected
denizens of a tide pool than a single octopus (DAndrade 1995:249).
This view has considerable experimental support, though there is little con-sensus as to the size or character of the domains. It is tempting to equate
domain with the institutional realms identified by Friedland & Alford (1991)
or Boltanski & Thevenot (1990), and to posit that culturally specific logics
of action are thus embedded in schematic organization, but there is at present
little if any empirical warrant for doing so.
IDENTITY CENTRALITY Some evidence suggests that affectively hot schemata
are more salient and have more extensive entailments than do emotionally neu-
tral structures. Work on identity (Wiley & Alexander 1987, Hogg & McGarty1990) suggests the possibility that the self may be an emotionally supersat-
urated cluster of schemata tending toward consistency and stability over time.
Schemata that are embedded in the self-schemata, then, are more closely artic-
ulated with other schemata than those that are not incorporated into the self.
ROLE CENTRALITY By analogy, one can view roles as situationally evoked,
emotionally activated, partial identities that provide integrated chunksof schem-
atic organization and permit compartmentalization of different cultural contents.
This perspective is appealing because it identifies a mechanism (i.e. role ac-tivation) connecting schematic triggering to contextual variation, and because
it is consistent with evidence for domain-specificity of schematic organization.
Moreover, because roles are embedded in distinctive role relations, this view
points toward an integration of cultural and network analysis within a single
framework (McCall 1987).
Which of these models of schematic thematization best describes the pro-
cesses by which people integrate schemata is at present anybodys guess. Sig-
nificant mattersthe extent to which ideology enters into conscious experience,
the patterning of cultural styles or orientations, and the stability of cognitionacross contextride on its resolution.
Cultural Change
A second priority for sociologists of culture is to create theories of cultural
changethat integrate ideas from research on culture and cognition with macroso-
ciological perspectives. At least four different change processes are crucial to
understand.
THEORY OF ENVIRONMENTAL TRIGGERING I have argued that culture enters
into everyday life through the interaction of environmental cues and mental
structures. I have further suggested, by combining logic-of-action theories in
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280 DiMAGGIO
sociology and domain-specificity theories in psychology, that cultural under-
standings may be fragmented by domain, so that when persons or groups switch
from one domain to another, their perspectives, attitudes, preferences, and dis-
positions may change radically. It follows that large-scale cultural changes maybe caused by large-scale, more-or-less simultaneous frame switches by many
interdependent actors.
At the micro level, we need a better understanding of how and why peo-
ple switch among frames, logics, or domains (White 1995; from a rational
choice perspective, Lindenberg & Frey 1993). The paradigmatic work on this
comes from language, where research on code-switching has documented the
circumstances (ordinarily changes in context, conversation partner, or topic)
that trigger change in language or dialect (Gumperz 1982). At the macro level,
the challenge is to create models that link environmental change to patterns ofswitching (White 1995).
THEORY OF SCHEMA ACQUISITION, DIFFUSION, AND EXTINCTION Psycholo-
gists have cast substantial light on the acquisition of schemata by individuals
during development (Nelson & Gruendel 1981, Hirschfeld 1994). Sociolo-
gists of culture should turn their attention to factors leading to change in the
distribution and level of activation of cultural representations or schemata in
the population. Such change may occur if different cohorts acquire particular
schemata at varying rates; or if changes in the distribution of environmental
cues lead to enhanced activation or deactivation of particular schemata that
have already been acquired.
Diffusion models of the sort that have been used to study the effects of
media exposure on the adoption of new technologies or beliefs may be useful.
Diffusion should be most effective where resonance exists between the new
cultural element and existing schematic organization (Sperber 1985).
Work in the historical sociology of culture provides some guidance.
Wuthnows (1989) macro-theory of ideological change, which points to the im-
portance of ecological effects on the life chances of new beliefs, may be usefully
transposed to more micro levels. Tilly (1992) has developed and implemented a
valuable approach to studying change over time in contentious movement reper-
toires. Buchmann & Eisner (1996) present evidence of accelerating change
in the public presentation of selves during the second half of the twentieth
century.
A particular challenge is to understand cognitive aspects of major collective
events in which large numbers of persons rapidly adopt orientations that might
have appeared culturally alien to the majority of them a short time before. Some
religious revivals, the emergence of capitalism after the fall of the Soviet Union,
and some spirals of ethnic antagonism are demanding cases of this kind.
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CULTURE AND COGNITION 281
THEORY OF DELIBERATIVE OVERRIDING It is important to understand not only
how culture constrains, but how persons and groups can transcend the biasing
effects of culture on thought. Work on this problem by psychologists (noted
earlier) must be supplemented by research on the types of social interactionthat lead large numbers of people to question and, ultimately, to revise their
schematic representations of social phenomena.
Analogy and Generalization
Related to the study of change, but so important that it warrants a section of its
own, is the problem of analogy and generalization. Sociological theories that
portray persons as actively incorporating culture into cognitive organization
invariably rely on some notion like the habitus, which Bourdieu (1990) refers
to as a system of durable transposable dispositions. The key question forall of these theories is: Under what conditions are dispositions or schemata
abstracted and transposed from one domain to another?
Almost all cultural change entails the transfer of some body of ideas or
images from one content area to another on the basis of similarity judgments.
Indeed, any attempt to characterize the culture of a group or a people in abstract
termsi.e., any analytic effort at thematizationtakes for granted that actors
have the capacity to draw analogies between classes of objects, actors, events,
or actions, and thereby to understand them in similar ways.
Think of culture as a network of interrelated schemata, with analogies as theties that create paths along which generalization and innovation occur. How
are new ties created? The literature provides at least three alternatives.
FEATURE CORRESPONDENCE In the most straightforward models, two schem-
ata or related structures lend themselves to analogy (and thus to generalization
across domains) insofar as they share particular features (Lakoff & Johnson
1980) that create a correspondence between them. Thus Swinburnes line,
when the hounds of spring are on winters traces, is meaningful because
of the correspondence between temporal and spatial pursuit and between thedestructive effects of hounds on hares and of spring on winter. Two problems
with this view are that the correspondence itself is constructed rather than innate;
and that analogical power would not seem to vary with the extent of overlap
between tenor and vehicle.
STRUCTURE-MAPPING This view takes as its starting point the existence of
some form of content-related domain-specificity. Analogies connect not sim-
ply schemata but whole domains (Tourganeau & Sternberg 1982), deriving their
power from the network of entailed comparisons they trigger. The most pow-
erful analogies connect domains that are structurally homologous. Put another
way, generalizability across domains is a function not of the extent to which
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282 DiMAGGIO
they share particular features in common, but of the extent to which relations
among features are structurally similar (Gentner 1983).
EMOTIONAL RESONANCE Some research suggests that affectively hotschemataare more likely to be generalized across domains than affectively neutral sche-
mata. For example, analogies are likely to be drawn between situations that
elicit strong emotional reactions of a similar kind (Abelson 1981:725).
POLYSEMY AND SEMANTIC CONTAGION A final possibility is that polysemous
expressionsthose with distinct meanings that resonate with multiple schemata
or domainsfacilitate analogical transfer. Bakhtins work (1986) on textual
multivocality is suggestive in this regard, as is Whites (1992) work on stories
and rhetorics. Ross (1992) portrays meaning as emerging from the relationsof words to one another in speech and to activities in real time. Because
these constantly change, meanings are rarely fixed, but instead adapt, diverge,
and spread across domains through semantic contagion. This perspective is
particularly attractive because it acknowledges endemic change in language and
other symbol systems and because it embedsgeneralization in social interaction.
SYMBOLS, NETWORKS, AND COGNITION
Cognitive aspects of culture are only oneand not necessarily the largestpart
of the sociology of cultures domain. But it is a part that we cannot avoid if we
are interested in how culture enters into peoples lives, for any explanation of
cultures impact on practice rests on assumptions about the role of culture in
cognition. I have argued that we are better off if we make such models explicit
than if we smuggle them in through the back door and that work in cognitive
psychology and social cognition, although animated by different questions,
offers tools that we sociologists can use to pursue our own agendas.
Ultimately, the challenge is to integrate the micro perspectives on culture de-
scribed here with analyses of cultural change in larger collectivities over longer
stretches of time. I have argued for a perspective that privileges schemata and re-
lated constructs as units of analysis, and attends to mechanisms by which phys-
ical, social, and cultural environments differentially activate these schemata.
This argument has begged the question of which aspects of the environment
are most worthy of study. Without denying the unquestionable importance of
research on how media and activity structures interact with subjective cultural
representations, I shall conclude by calling brief attention to new research on the
relationship of cognitive and symbolic phenomena to social structures portrayed
as social networks.
Some researchers have focused on cognitive representations of social struc-
ture. [Fiske & Linville (1980) claim that schema theory is especially relevant
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CULTURE AND COGNITION 283
to the representation of social phenomena; and see Howard (1994).] The idea
that social structures exist simultaneously through mental representations and
in concrete social relations was central to Nadels (1957) role theory. Both
theorists (Emirbayer & Goodwin 1994, Orr 1995, White 1992) and researchers(Krackhardt 1987) are exploring the implications of this view.
Networks are crucial environments for the activation of schemata, logics, and
frames. In a study of the Paris Commune, Gould (1995) argues that political
protest networks did not create new collective identities, but rather activated
identities that communards already possessed. Bernstein (1975) demonstrates
the impact of network structures on individuals tendency to employ cognitive
abstraction. Erickson (1996), studying security guards, finds a correlation be-
tween the complexity of social networks and the diversity of conversational
interests. Vaughan (1986) describes how people questioning marriage altercustomary patterns of social relations in order to create new, independent iden-
tities as prologue to separation. Such studies point to a new, more complex
understanding of the relationship between culture and social structure built
upon careful integration of micro and macro, and of cognitive and material,
perspectives.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks are due to the students in my Princeton graduate seminar on cultureand cognition for insightful discussions of much of the work reviewed here;
to my psychology colleagues Marcia Johnson, Dale Miller, and Deborah Pren-
tice, who provided valuable guidance in my efforts to come to speedy terms
with culture-relevant literature in cognitive and social psychology; and to Bob
Wuthnow, Dale Miller, Eviatar Zerubavel, Roger Friedland, and John Mohr for
opportunities to present these thoughts at meetings and workshops at Princeton,
Rutgers, Santa Barbara, and the ASA meetings. For valuable readings of ear-
lier drafts, I am indebted to Roger Friedland, Michele Lamont, Diane Mackie,
Calvin Morrill, Abigail Smith, Ann Swidler, and Eviatar Zerubavel.
Visit theAnnual Reviews home page at
http://www.annurev.org.
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